Robert Palmer Never Meant to Turn Us On

ByABC News
September 26, 2003, 3:12 PM

Sept. 26 -- Robert Palmer never meant to turn us on to the guitar-wielding girls in his "Addicted to Love" video and came to rue talking about the breakout hit that defined an era on MTV.

The musician, who died today of a heart attack at age 54, never even danced with the sexy female band in his 1986 video. The girls were digitally edited into the final product, and it wasn't even Palmer's idea.

"It was a high-gloss fashion photographer totally him," Palmer told ABCNEWS Radio two years ago in an exclusive interview.

"I'm delighted that the iconography that he created is still valid, especially in the light of today's more overt vulgarness."

Palmer had long ago dismissed videos featuring women flaunting big cleavage as "soft-core pornography." But trying to be philosophical about it, Palmer also noted that his risqué videos and skinny-tie 1980s persona were an undying public obsession.

Chaka Kahn Almost Co-Dependant on Love

Palmer had much different plans when he wrote "Addicted to Love." He had intended "Addicted to Love" to be a duet with Chaka Kahn. They recorded it, but her vocals were deleted when her manager barred the song's release.

Palmer and Khan had bumped into each other at a club when he was working on the song, and visions of a duet were immediately dancing in his head, he told the Los Angeles Times in 1986.

"We hit it off immediately," he told the paper. "I was impressed. She's the one singer I've always wanted to sing with."

They came back to Palmer's studio and recorded together. But the soul diva already had two songs burning up the charts and her managers didn't want to put too much product on the market.

Nevertheless, the song rocked to the top of the charts and became Palmer's first Top 10 hit. The video became an even bigger success, coming in at No. 8 on MTV's list of 100 Greatest Videos Ever Made.

Palmer went on to become one of the most successful stars of the 1980s, both as a solo artist and as the front man for Power Station, which he formed along with Duran Duran heartthrobs John Taylor and Andy Taylor.